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  2. Shabaka Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabaka_Stone

    The Shabaka Stone, sometimes Shabaqo, is a relic incised with an ancient Egyptian religious text, which dates from the Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt. [1] In later years, the stone was likely used as a millstone, which damaged the hieroglyphs. This damage is accompanied by other intentional defacements, leaving the hieroglyphic inscription in ...

  3. Soapstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soapstone

    The soft stone is easily carved and is not degraded by heating. The slick surface of soapstone allows the finished object to be easily removed. Welders and fabricators use soapstone as a marker due to its resistance to heat; it remains visible when heat is applied. It has also been used for many years by seamstresses, carpenters, and other ...

  4. Greywacke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greywacke

    Greywacke stone has been used as a building material and a sculptural material across many eras and societies. Its oldest known uses date to the early third millennium BCE, in Egypt's early dynastic period. Its wide use in sculpture and vessels is thought to have been due to its fine grain size and resistance to fracturing, making it suitable ...

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  6. Rock (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_(geology)

    The Stone Age was a period of widespread stone tool usage. [39] Early Stone Age tools were simple implements, such as hammerstones and sharp flakes. Middle Stone Age tools featured sharpened points to be used as projectile points, awls, or scrapers. Late Stone Age tools were developed with craftsmanship and distinct cultural identities. [40]

  7. Snake-stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snake-stone

    A snake-stone, also known as a viper's stone, snake's pearl, black stone, serpent-stone, [1] or nagamani is an animal bone or stone [2] used as folk medicine for snake bite in Africa, South America, India and Asia. [3] [4] The early Celtic era European adder stone is also called a snake stone, and is usually made from coloured glass, often with ...

  8. Gongshi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gongshi

    Gongshi (Scholar's rock) in Wenmiao temple, Shanghai. Gongshi (Chinese: 供石), also known as scholar's rocks or viewing stones, are naturally occurring or shaped rocks which are traditionally appreciated by Chinese scholars. [1]

  9. Wissahickon Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wissahickon_Formation

    Wissahickon schist is quarried as a building stone and is used primarily as a decorative stone rather than a weight bearing stone. However, there are numerous old buildings in the Philadelphia area that are constructed almost entirely of this rock.